In this action the plaintiff sought recovery of damages premised upon defendant’s alleged negligent medical treatment which originated with surgery performed on March 23 and May 1, 1970. The cоmplaint was dated May 21, 1973, more than three years after the claimed cause of action accrued.
Ultimately, and after the plaintiff’s application for a default judgment had been denied, a Justice of the Superior Court ordered judgment for the defendant on his motion for summary judgment, from which the plaintiff has appealed. We deny this appeal.
Appellant relies on the following two points:
“1. The Court, erred in denying [Plaintiff’s] Application for Judgment by Default.
2. The Court erred in entering summary judgment for Defendant Du-Mais.”
POINT I
Admittedly, the defendant was tardy in filing his answer as required by Rule 12(a), M.R.C.P. Four days prior to filing of the answer the plaintiff had moved for a default judgment for failure to answer pursuant to Rule 55(b)(2), M.R.C.P., which in pertinent part merely provides:
“[T]he party entitled to a judgment by default shall apply to the court therеfor.”
In defense of the action of the Justice in denying the motion, the defendant advances the argument that the granting of a motion for default judgment is discretionary. He finds support in this position from the commentary, Field, McKusick and Wroth, 2 Maine Civil Practice, § 55.4, at 21-22.
“The hearing on plaintiff’s application for default judgment is concerned with two issues: (1) Should the default judg *1040 ment be enterеd, and (2) What should the judgment be in amount and kind? On the first question, the court must exercise its discretion, balancing the importance of parties being diligent in the trial of cases against the general disfаvor with which the law views judgments by default. As has been said: ‘[Substantial rights should not be determined by default if that procedure can reasonably be avoided and no substantial prejudice has resulted.’ ”
See also Barron and Holtzoff, Federal Practice and Procedure, § 1216.
Our Civil Rules of Procedure, which have been in effect since 1959, were intentionally modeled after the comparable Federal Rules. Rule 55(b) (2), M.R.C.P., is no exception. We find general agreement in the federal cases for the proposition that the granting of a default judgment is discretionary, premised on the theory that justice is better served by adjudicating cases on their merits than by the use of default judgments.
See, e. g., Flaks v. Koegel,
Of course, there are circumstances under which default judgments become approрriate, such as cases in which the action is not contested, 1 or where the record indicates unconscionable delay or contumacious conduct. 2
The Justice below dismissed the motion for a default judgment without comment but tersely added:
“All pleadings to be completed within ten (10) days.
Defendants to appear for depositions within thirty (30) days.”
Since the defendant’s answer, which was already filed in the Clerk’s office when the Justice denied the motion for default judgment, disclosed a meritorious defense, namely, a denial of all alleged acts of medical malpractice and specifically raising the defense of the statute of limitations, we have no basis for saying that the Justice abused his discretion.
The plaintiff’s reliance on
Willette v. Umhoeffer,
This point is without merit.
POINT II
Defendant’s motion for summary judgment under Rule 56, M.R.C.P., was based on the theory that neither the pleadings, the plaintiff’s рre-trial memorandum, nor four depositions 3 then on file would allow the plaintiff recovery as a matter of law. A Justice of the Superior Court granted the motion, holding that fraudulent conсealment does not exist
*1041 “where the facts giving rise to the Plaintiff's cause of action are known to the Plaintiff immediately and the only ‘concealment’ is a failure to affirmatively advisе plaintiff that those facts may give rise to a claim for damages.”
14 M.R.S.A. § 753 provides:
“Actions for assault and battery, and for false imprisonment, slander, libel and malpractice of physicians and all others engaged in the healing art shall be commenced within 2 years after the cause of action accrues.” 4 (Emphasis supplied.)
The plaintiff contends that the Justice below was in error in granting summary judgment because a genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether the defendant had fraudulently concealed the plaintiff’s cause of action from her within the meaning of 14 M.R.S.A. § 859 which provides:
“If a person, liable to any action mentioned, fraudulently conceals the cause thereof from the person entitled thereto, or if a fraud is committed which entitles any person to an action, the action may be cоmmenced at any time within 6 years after the person entitled thereto discovers that he has just cause of action.”
The plaintiff’s complaint recognizes her vulnerability under the two-yеar statute of limitations and attempts to avoid a facially defective complaint by alleging: “At all times since March 23, 1970, [defendant has] fraudulently concealed [his] own negligencе from [plaintiff].”
We have read the various ■ depositions which formed a basis for the decision reached by the Justice below. Although layman’s language was used, there can be no doubt thаt the plaintiff knew the nature of each surgical procedure that was performed, when it was performed, the reasons necessitating the surgery, the results thereof, and the prognosis. There is nothing in any of the depositions which suggests any erroneous or misleading statement on any of these matters.
As wé understand the plaintiff’s position, she contends that an issue as to fraudulent concealment is viable because the defendant did not specifically advise her that the various surgical procedures might have been performed negligently.
This is illustrated in the plaintiff’s pretrial memorandum by the use of this language:
“(c) Statute of Limitations'. Did Defendants, acting within the context of a confidential relationship and purporting to act or advise with Plaintiff’s interest in mind, fraudulently conceal Plaintiffs cause of action from her?” (Emphasis supplied.)
We do not deem it a function of attending physicians to give their patients legal advice. If the plaintiff’s contention is correct, every doctor treating a patient would be under a legal obligation to advise his patient that he might be acting negligently. Given the fact that the relationship between physician and patient is one of great confidence and trust, thus imposing a duty to disclose all pertinent facts to the patient, it does not necessarily follow that this obligation to disclose must include the peripheral possibilities of misjudgment and negligence. We deem that the fraudulent concealmеnt contemplated by Section 859 is the failure to disclose specific acts which, if known, might give rise to a cause of action for malpractice. In
Eschenbacher v. Hier,
“[I]t is the cause of actiоn which must be fraudulently concealed by failing *1042 to disclose the fact of injury resulting from the malpractice, by diverting the patient from discovering the malpractice or the party resрonsible therefor, or by other means the effect of which is to conceal from the patient his right to sue.”
See also Sheets v. Burman,
The plaintiff cites two cases in particular as supporting her positiоn.
Guy v. Schuldt,
Pashley v. Pacific Electric Co.,
Since our reading of the record discloses the existence of no fact from which a fact finder might conclude that the defendant had been guilty of fraudulent сoncealment, thus taking the case out of the statute of limitations, we conclude that the ruling of the Justice below was proper. 5
The entry is:
Appeal denied.
All Justices concur.
Notes
.
Downing v. O’Brien,
.
See G.F.I. Computer Industries, Inc. v. Fry,
.The four depositions were from the plaintiff ; the defendant; Dr. Bean, plaintiff’s original doctor who referred her to the defendant for surgery; and the plaintiff’s mother.
. This statute has been interpreted as becoming operative from the dаte of the negligent act as opposed to the date of the discovery thereof, assuming there is no suggestion of fraudulent concealment.
Tantish v. Szendey,
. The result which we have reached should not be interpreted as any relaxation of the general rule that if there is any genuine issue of fact remaining unresolved, summary judgment is inappropriate. See Commentary 56.1 and cases cited thereunder, Field, McKusick and Wroth, 2 Maine Civil Practice, at 34-85.
